Life as a House (New Line Platinum Series) buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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Features
• Anamorphic
• Closed-captioned
• Color
• Dolby
• DVD-Video
• Widescreen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 09 November, 2001
DVD Release : 26 March, 2002 |
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Life as a House (New Line Platinum Series) description
A respectable tearjerker, Life as a House is a welcome throwback to angst-ridden family dramas like Ordinary People and Terms of Endearment. It falls short of those modern classics, but you'll probably still need Kleenex if you appreciate Kevin Kline's underrated dramatic skills. As the title suggests, Kline's project is a broad metaphor for repairing damaged lives from the foundation up. Playing an architect with terminal cancer, he gives an Oscar®-caliber performance, reaching out to his estranged, nihilistic son (future Star Wars star Hayden Christensen) and ex-wife (Kristin Scott-Thomas) as he wrecks and rebuilds the Malibu cliff-top home that contained his most painful memories. Director Irwin Winkler's flair with actors helps to minimize lapses in a script (by As Good As It Gets scribe Mark Andrus) that occasionally borders on maudlin. Overall, this is a fine reminder that Hollywood hasn't lost its soul to action and special effects. --Jeff Shannon |
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Life as a House (New Line Platinum Series) Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ |
Good film but...
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It's an okay film overall, especially if you watched it through. Initially, the movie gave me a lot of wince. It's not because Kevin Kline's character was going postal, nor Hayden Christensen played an emo doing what appeared to be auto-erotic asphyxia, or Jena Malone's character was totally a wh*re. No, none of that, but it's because the script was flawed in term of characterization.
I can understand why George (Kevin Kline) gone postal, and why he actually endured 20-some years before he blew up. Did he not think through the consequence of his action? He doesn't strike me as a person who would bottle up his anger for decades. No, in fact, we had seen him pee into the ocean. This is not a reserve, introverted person. He doesn't care a squat about what people think of him.
I don't like why Sam decided to suddenly shed his make-up (yes, Hayden was fabulous with eyeliners, eye shadow, lip stick). I think the filmmakers want us to see the progress of his character from a rebel to a daddy's boy.... Nevertheless, that was on a questionable premise. Does putting make up on makes him an awful person? Granted, maybe he did all that for the shock effect, because he wanted to be a rebel, but I never believe he was ever a "bad boy" at all, or at least the script does not set me up to become a believer of that.
There are a lot of stuff in this film that made me want to ask how can everyone tolerate George's self-pity for so long? It's nice he built a house before he died, to fulfill his dream. That's all fine, but I do not like the motivation behind it. This is "Life as a House", not "Me as a Planet".
In term of direction, the director mentioned he wanted to make a film that examine what's going on in our society today. If that's the direction, I have to say he was looking at our society in a rather conservative scope (and I am a conservative). The kind a parent would condemn their kid with. I do not believe the movie made a good point on "what can be done", instead, it judged, "this is dysfunctional."
I do like the house though. It looks comfy and spacious. :-) The people behind the scene put a lot of effort into it, and I do like the analogy. Life /is/ like a house. The house analogy reminds me of "House of Sand and Fog." (which is a very good movie)
Overall it's a good film, but it's flawed. I may be a little harsh, but if what I mentioned (i.e., inconsistency of character; judgmental) got sorted out, it'll be a five-star movie. |
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